A circuit is designed with a first transistor (661) having a current path coupled between a supply terminal (32) and a first output terminal (665). A second transistor has a current path coupled between the first output terminal and a reference terminal. The current path of the second transistor current path has substantially the same width and length as the first transistor current path. A first comparator circuit (679, 685) has first (668) and second (23) input terminals and a second output terminal (681). The first input terminal is coupled to the first output terminal. The first comparator circuit produces a control signal in response to a voltage between the first and second input terminals. A generator circuit (80) receives the control signal and produces an output voltage at the supply terminal.
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1. A circuit, comprising:
a bandgap reference circuit including at least one bipolar transistor, the bandgap reference circuit arranged to produce a reference voltage corresponding to a current through the at least one bipolar transistor; a multiplier circuit coupled to receive the reference voltage, the multiplier circuit producing a reference current through a resistive element in response to the reference voltage, the resistive element having plural output terminals including a first output terminal, the resistive element producing plural multiplied reference voltages at corresponding output terminals; a comparator circuit having first and second input terminals and having a comparator output terminal, the first input terminal coupled to receive a multiplied reference voltage at the first output terminal, the comparator circuit arranged to produce a supply voltage at the comparator output terminal; a drive transistor having a current path connected between a voltage supply terminal and a second output terminal and having a gate; a buffer transistor having a current path connected between the voltage supply terminal and the gate of the drive transistor and having a gate connected to the comparator output terminal; and a supply reference circuit coupled between the second output terminal and a reference terminal, the supply reference circuit having at least one output terminal coupled to the second input terminal, the supply reference circuit arranged for producing a supply reference voltage having a magnitude that is different than a magnitude of the supply voltage.
2. A circuit as in
3. A circuit as in
a first current mirror circuit connected to a supply voltage terminal; and a second current mirror circuit connected in series between the first current mirror circuit and the at least one bipolar transistor.
4. A circuit as in
5. A circuit as in
a first P-channel transistor having a current path connected to a voltage supply terminal and having a gate connected to a gate of one of the at least two P-channel transistors; a second P-channel transistor having a current path connected in series with current path of the first P-channel transistor and having a gate connected to a gate of another of the at least two P-channel transistors; and a bipolar transistor having a current path connected between the current path of the second P-channel transistor and a reference terminal.
6. A circuit as in
7. A circuit as in
8. A circuit as in
a second comparator circuit having a third input terminal coupled to receive the reference voltage, a fourth input terminal coupled to the resistive element, and an output terminal; and a transistor having a current path connected in series with the resistive element and having a gate connected to the output terminal of the second comparator circuit, the transistor arranged to conduct the reference current.
9. A circuit as in
10. A circuit as in
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This application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. §121 as a division of application Ser. No. 09/383,696, filed Aug. 26, 1999, which claims priority under 35 U.S.C. §119(e)(1) of provisional application Ser. No. 60/098,671, filed Sep. 1, 1998, the entirety of which is incorporated herein by reference.
This invention relates to an integrated circuit and more particularly to an integrated circuit with a voltage level detector using voltage addition or subtraction.
Present complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) synchronous dynamic random access memory (SDRAM) circuits are frequently used for main memory m a variety of applications including desk top and portable computer systems. Advances in system technology continually reduce feature sizes and gate dielectric thickness. Internal operating voltages must be closely regulated for these reduced feature sizes and gate dielectric thickness in order to maintain reliability. Moreover, this regulation must be effective over a wide range of external voltage and temperature.
Regulation a internal voltage supplies, such as Vpp and Vbb, for SDRAM and FLASH memory circuits is particularly critical due to the relatively high electric field across the gate dielectric of memory cells during a memory operation. Large variations in voltage supplies Vpp or Vbb may degrade memory cell transistor performance characteristics over time and even lead to dielectric rupture and field failure of SDRAM memory cells. Large variations in voltage supply Vbb may degrade overall circuit performance through transistor threshold voltage variation due to body effect. Previous regulation attempts were based on detecting variation of voltage supplies Vpp and Vbb by an integral number of transistor threshold voltages with respect to supply voltage Vdd or reference voltage Vss. For example, the Vpp level detector circuit of
These problems are resolved by a circuit, comprising a first transistor having a current path coupled between a supply terminal and a first output terminal, the first transistor current path having a width and a length. A second transistor has a current path coupled between the first output terminal and a reference terminal and has substantially the same width and length as the first transistor current path. A first comparator circuit has first and second input terminals and a second output terminal. The first input terminal is coupled to the first output terminal. The first comparator circuit produces a control signal in response to a voltage between the first and second input terminals. A generator circuit is coupled to receive the control signal and produces an output voltage at the supply terminal.
The present invention linearly translates the supply voltage to a reference voltage without loss of accuracy due to transistor threshold voltage, temperature or supply voltage variation.
A more complete understanding of the invention may be gained by reading the subsequent detailed description with reference to the drawings wherein:
A regulator circuit which may employ the level detector of the present invention as shown in
Turning now to
Turning now to
The voltage multiplier circuit 40 of
Control signal VBINENB is high during normal circuit operation. This high level and the resulting low level on lead 427 turn on CMOS pass gates 421, 437 and 451, thereby producing reference voltages on leads 417, 433 and 449 at leads 22, 19 and 21, respectively. Alternatively, when control signal VBINENB is low during a burn in test, CMOS pass gates 421, 437 and 451 are off and CMOS pass gates 423, 439 and 453 are on, thereby applying burn in reference voltages VPPREFABI, VREFPERIBI and VREFARYBI to leads 22, 19 and 21, respectively.
Turning now to
The schematic diagram of
where the Fermi potential is
the body effect parameter is
and Vbs is bulk-substrate voltage of the P-channel transistor. When the bulk terminal is directly connected to its source, however, Vth is equal to Vt0. The current through each transistor in the reference circuit in saturation mode is:
and equating drain currents for each transistor of the reference circuit produces the following three equations.
Eliminating K'W/L, taking the square root of each equation and eliminating Vth produces the following simplified equations.
The solution to these equations shows that the reference voltage at lead 605 (V605) is equal to Vpp minus VPPREFA. Since the design target of the reference circuit is a voltage of 1.6 V (VPPREF) at lead 605 that follows Vpp variations, and Vpp is equal to 3.4 V, reference voltage VPPREFA is set to 1.8 V. Thus, the level of the reference voltage at lead 605 is:
The reference circuit output 605 is connected to the control gate of a first input transistor 617 of a comparator. Reference voltage VPPREF is applied to the control gate of the other input transistor 619. The comparator produces a control signal at terminal 625 that is buffered by inverter 627 to produce control signal VPPSLOW on lead 28. This control signal VPPSLOW is normally low and goes high when the reference voltage on lead 605 indicates supply voltage Vpp is below a desired level.
Turning now to
Simulation waveforms of
In standby mode, control signal VPRDB goes high, and the low-level output of inverter 671 turns off transistor 657 and turns on transistor 655. This produces a high level output from the level translator on lead 659, thereby turning off transistor 663. Output signals from inverters 673 and 675 turn off CMOS pass gate 667 and transistor 687 and turn on transistor 669 and 652. This disables the comparator and produces a high-level control signal VPPALOW on lead 29.
The multiplex circuit 69 of
Turning now to
Simulation waveforms of
This circuit offers significant advantages over reference circuits of the prior art. First, it does not depend on a discrete number of transistor threshold voltages for voltage detection. Stable reference voltages derived from a bandgap reference generator circuit and a voltage multiplier circuit regulate the voltage supplies. Second, the voltage comparator circuits derive reference voltages from actual supply voltages through linear voltage translation. Comparator circuits need not compare actual supply voltages to target reference voltages and are capable, therefore, of operating at very low external supply voltage levels. Third, the method of linear voltage translation is independent of variation of transistor threshold voltage due to body effect. Finally, this method of detection is approximately linear over the supply voltage range of interest.
Although the invention has been described in detail with reference to its preferred embodiment, it is to be understood that this description is by way of example only and is not to be construed in a limiting sense. For example, the bandgap reference circuit of
Koelling, Jeffrey E., Shih, Albert
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